The Great Believers - Rebecca Makkai Page 0,158

after he came.

* * *

Roman would show up like rain, once every couple of weeks, and he’d stay till four in the morning, leaving before the city woke up. Every time, as he put his shoes on, he’d say, “I don’t know what I’m doing.” And Yale would think, but not say, that they were both lost in the woods. Only Roman thought Yale knew the way out.

* * *

Roman liked to do it spooning on their sides, his chest against Yale’s back. He’d drench both of them with sweat. He would groan, shaking, into Yale’s hair. The first few times he was too fast, too spastic. Then he relaxed, learned to slow down, started to seem like he actually enjoyed it and it wasn’t a thing to race through in shame. Now he’d even stick around and talk afterward.

* * *

Roman said, “No offense, and it’s—I mean it’s a good thing, but your dick is like a fucking pepper grinder. I mean, I’ve never seen—like, I don’t really—” and Yale said, “Don’t worry. I’m not gonna try to fuck you.” Yale asked Roman if he’d thought about going to the Pride parade, which was ten days away. They were starting to sober up; it was three in the morning. “Just being counted matters,” Yale said, and heard how he sounded like Charlie. “Last year we had thirty-five thousand.”

Roman rolled toward Yale and grinned, his eyes molelike without his glasses. “You’re saying size matters to you.”

“I’m saying we want to top that.”

Roman laughed, ran a finger up Yale’s groin.

“It’d be good for you. There’s something about seeing some drag queen doing a pole dance in a flatbed right there in the street that makes it easier to go back to work the next day and not worry about being a little faggy.” Not that Yale went to work anymore. “And also—” but Roman sank his teeth into the top of Yale’s ear, moved his hand up his side. “Also, it’s educational.”

“You’re educational.”

* * *

Yale hadn’t heard from Roman since that night, and meanwhile he’d decided he might not even go to the parade himself. He bought a ticket for the Cubs-Mets game, which wouldn’t start till 3:30 but at least gave him a fairly solid excuse, one he used when Asher called the day before the parade and asked if Yale could lend a hand on the AIDS Foundation of Chicago float. “Actually,” Asher said, “it’s not your hands we want. It’s your cute face. We’re wearing clothes, no Speedos involved. Unless you want to, of course. Who am I to stop you?” Yale would have done just about anything else for Asher, but he couldn’t be in a parade, couldn’t roll down the street past everyone he knew, couldn’t run into Charlie in the staging area.

Ross—the redhead who’d been flirting with Yale in the Marina City gym for the past month—said if Yale wanted to hang out, some friends would be watching from a fire escape at Wellington and Clark, with mojitos. Yale didn’t want to lead Ross on, but the setup was appealing. When he first moved to the city he’d been in love with all the fire escapes, kept feeling Audrey Hepburn might appear there with her guitar, her hair wrapped in a towel, that she might sing him “Moon River” and grab his hand and pull him across town.

He had a mental list of reasons not to go: He wanted to see Sandberg face off against Gooden. He didn’t want to stand there getting turned on by beautiful shirtless men just to come home and jerk off sadly in the bathroom. He didn’t feel like worrying about how he looked, scanning the crowd constantly for friends and former friends. He did not want to watch the Out Loud float go by. Plus, he worried every year that this would be the time someone would set off a bomb, open fire on the crowd. He’d watched on the news last night as a thousand KKK supporters filled a park in a black neighborhood on the southwest side. Yesterday it was racial slurs they were shouting, but they’d announced their plan to rally again in Lincoln Park before the parade, in the free-speech area. It couldn’t end well.

* * *

Over the past four months he’d contacted every place he could think of, even the aquarium and the planetarium, small places in Michigan, remote university galleries where he had no contacts. His CV was strong, but no one

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